The geography of Winthrop, Massachusetts. - CORE · with their tying tombolo,the t r unk. The maxi...
Transcript of The geography of Winthrop, Massachusetts. - CORE · with their tying tombolo,the t r unk. The maxi...
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Boston University
OpenBU http://open.bu.edu
Theses & Dissertations Dissertations and Theses (pre-1964)
1953
The geography of Winthrop,
Massachusetts.
Triantafell, Arthur N.
Boston University
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/9196
Boston University
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BOSTON UNI VERSITY GRWUATE SCHOOL
Thesis
THE GEOGRAPHY OF WINTHROP, I'1ASSACHUSETTS.
By
ARTHUR N.TRIANTAFELL (A.B.,Boston University,l951)
Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts 1953
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/i (\ \
Approved b;y-
I q 0 -t -
First Reader •• ~ •• ( .• ~ Profe s sor of Geogr aphy
Second Reader ••• ~~. K.~ .. ~~(&or of Geography
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Contents
Part I
THE PHYSICAL ELEMENTS
LOCATION & AREA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GEOLOGY ••••••••••••••••••••••••
Historical Geolo • • • • • • • • • •·• • • • • • •·.• • Th D gy- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
e rumlins of Eastern · Winthrop · - • -· The 1v1arsbes - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Shore Line • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -· The Ground Mor~i~~·~;·w~;t~;~·wi;th;~~········· ............
CLI NATE & WEATHER • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Part II
THE HUV.!AN ELEJviENTS.
THE TOWN'S HISTORY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE POPULATION ••••••••••••••••• Population & Density •••• •••• ••• -•••••••••••• -.~. Winthr op 's Fore i gn-Born Element ••••••••••••••• Residential Characteristics ••••••••••••••••• ·. -. The Religions of Winthrop's People •••••••••• · ••
EGO~JO!« • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _. Indian Economy · ••••••• · ••••••• --•••••• · ••••• · •• _._._. _• ·• Agricultural Economy · •••••• -••••••••••••••••••• _. Industrial-Agricultural Economy ••••••••••••••• Resort-Agricultural Economy ••••• _. ••••••••••• . • _. Urban Economy ••••••••••••• _• •••••••••••• _ ••• • .• •. Commercial Activities•••••••··••••••••••••••••
T?..ANSPORTATION •••••••••••• •. • • • • • • • -• • • • •·•·•-• .... •·•·• • •
G6VEJ.i.:N'~N'r •••••••••••• • • ·• • • • • ·• • • • • • • ·. , • • • • • • • • • • • • •
THE FUT lJRE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • •· • • ·• • • • • •· •
PAGE
2
4 4 6 9
10 15
16
19
21 21 22 24 25
27 27 27 28 29 30 30
32
35
36
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Part III
PAGE
4l\.P PEI-TDIX I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 7 l-Tean Honthl y 8. Annu a l Temperature & Ra i nfall .. 37
AP PZNDIX II : ANALYS I S OF' FOREIG·N BORH POPUL TI ON H -·li NTIIROP . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 38
The Hi e;l1.lands . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 38 linthrop Be a ch , Great Head, & Poin t Shirley ••••• 38 Court Park & Cottao e Park ••••••••••••••••••••• 39 Tb.ornt on Par k Ar ea............................ 39 Ce11tre •.. .......•...•..• •. . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • • 40
I!
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Introduction
The purpose of this thesis is to make a comprehen
sive study of the hunmn and physical elements which
contr ibuted to the geographic evolution of Winthrop
from virgin forest to a highly urbanized area and of
those e lements which are likely to influence the geo
graphy of the town in the future.
1
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____________________________ ......... ....
Figure
1.
2.
4.
5.
6.
T.
8.
9.
10.
12.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Index IV.Iap ••••••• · •••••••••••• · ••••••••••• ·•
Relief I~p ••....••....•.••.•••••• ~ ·• · ••• ·• ·•
Belle Isle Inl e t Br idge ••••••••• -•••• -••••
Southeast Slope of Great Head •••••••••• -.
Northeast Slope of Great Head •••••••••• -.
'f.iJap Showing Locat i on and Extent, Past and Present, of Drumlins of ~vinthrop •••••••
Point Shirley ••••••••••••••••••••••••• · ••
Cehtral Lowland Area of Winthrop ••••••• ~
Winthrop Beach Looki ng South ••••••••••••
Winthr op Beach Looking Nbrth •••••••• ~ •• ~
Rock Debree Exposed at Low Tide •••••••••
Devi l's Rock •••••••• ~ ••• ~ •••••••••••••• ~
Deane Winthrop House •••• -. · •••••••••••• ·• ·• ·•
Page
la
lb
3
6a
6b
6c
7a
9a
lOa
lOb
12a
13a
20
14. Avera ge Value of Home s in Winthrop in 1950 24a
15.
17.
18.
19.
Ave r a ge Income of t he People of Winthrop in 1950 •••••••••• ~~~ ••• ~ ••••••• ~~ •• ~ ••
Taft 1 s Inn· ••••••••.••• · ••••• · •••• · •••• · ••• -. ·• ·•
Distribut ion of Religious Groups in vlinthrop in 1953 •• -•••••• -•••••••••••• · ••
Trans portation :Map •••• -••••••••••••••••• ·•
'i'linthrop 1 s Civic Center •• · ••• ·• · •••••••••••
Stor m \'lave s at Winthrop Beach •••••••••• ·•
24b
24c
25a
3la
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41
lli
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•
Saugus
Revere
Chelsea
.. t
. ..
FIG.l
Index Map
Lynn
Harbor
Bay
~~ ()
q MI~S
N
t
' J tum Qui ncy Hingham
Bay Bay -... -·· ~ ... - •
1
-
la
2 I
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: ! !
i ·
Q Feet lQOO
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Location and Area
The peninsula that comprises the to·tm of Winthrop
stretches out from the mainland in a generally southeast
direction. In combin~tion with Deer Island(f'ig .l),it
forms a continuous chain of land bounding Boston Harbor to
the north. Winthrop's existence aided in the development
of Boston into a great shipping center,for the to~m
a cts as a na tural breabvat~r. On t he eastern side of t he
town,along the extensive beach and headlands,the giant
breakers that otherwise vTould s..,.;eep into the harbor are
absorbed
When loolced at from t he s outh, v'linthrop g ives t9-e im
pression of an elephant's head ivith the main body of' the
town repr esenting t he ear and Great Head and Point Sh irley •
with their tying tombolo,the t r unk. The max i mum extent of
the town north to south is some two and a half miles. East
to west the distance at its max imum is a bout one and a
half miles. The area of the to1m is 1.6 square miles, mak
ing it in point of s ize one of the s mallest commun ities in
the state. It s highly diversified area,however ,gives one
the impr e s s ion that a much greater area is encompassed.
The only land conne ction to the mainland is the Winthrop . . ~arkway(fig .2),which runs from the northwest corner of the .. tovm to Revere, pas s ing over a nar row strip of land bounded
on t he south'\>rest by a salt marsh and a creek and on the ..
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northeast by Short Beach and Broad Sound(fig.2). However,
the most widely used means of con~unication is an old
bridge over Belle Isle Inlet(fig.2) at a point a little
less than one mile southwest of the land connection.
The extreme southern tip of the to~m has,within recent
times,been joined to Deer Island by the gradual filling in
of Shirley Gut by ocean currents. The town is bounded on
all sides by the sea,to the north and east by Broad Sound,
to the south and west by Boston Harbor,and to the northwest
by Belle Isle Inlet and Short Beach Creek(fig.2). In all
there are some eight miles of shore line.
' ;
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FIG.3
The old bridge over Belle Isle Inlet
3
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Geology
Historical Geology The geologic history of the penin
sula tovm of Winthrop E!\o\a Wil.lli&b:Fett does not go back beyond
the Quaternary period. However since the town's geology is
to a great extent conditioned by the geology of the Boston
region,a brief description of the pre-Quaternary is included.
In the latter part of the Devonian period,the Boston area
was the scene of a great geologic upheaval called the Acadian
revolution. The region v1as crumpled,and the mountain roots
4
that were created by the compression of the sediments in the
Acadian geosyncline were down folded. There then occurred a
period during which this crumpled z one \vas uplifted. This
differential upward floating of mountain roots produced the
intermontaine basins and fault blocks to be seen around Boston.
Fault blocks rose to the north and south of Boston,forming
mountains of considerable height. Those to the south were higher.
On the northern side of the Boston Basin,at the foot of the
lesser mountains,there formed an intermontane lake in which
great thicknesses of mud accumulated. At the f'oot of the moun
tains to the south,great quantities of coarse gravel accumulated,
interfingering with the mud. Meanwhile the southern hills Here
occupied by an alpine glacier which moved northward over the
basin depositing till, "rhich became interbedded vri th the shale
and conglomerate.
Alternative explanations,if the idea of interfingering is
rejected include(l) tremendous folding,(2) a series of thrust
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fa.ults,and(3) a graben bounded by normal f'aults. All involve
great movement.
At the time the crumpled zone \'las being subjected to
isostatic uplift,a considerable a mount of lava i s sued along
the fault fractures. Volcanoes were in constant eruption,and
tuff and a gglomerate were interbedded with the previously
indurated clastic sediments of the basin. This crust was
compressed,folded,and sheared at the close of the Paleozoic
era,the disturbance being the Appalachian revolution.
From the Triassic until the Pleistocene epoch,the region
was repeatedly uplifted. A revival of dis section and degra-
dation towards a new base level began. The Boston area was
reduced to a part of a giant peneplane, "VIhich was uplifted
5
and tilted so that its eastern end was submerged in the Atlantic.
During the Quarternary, the \'lisc.oncin ice sheet covered the
area. The geologic conditions existing during Recent time
were essentially the same as the present. However,the coast
has undergone a general submergence due to the post-glacial
rise of sea leve1. 1
Today,Winthrop is composed of post-Pliocene glacial detri
tus or drift of considerable depth. This glacial mantle was
deposited in the form of drumlins in the eastern part of
Winthrop and as ground moraine in the western part of the town.
1. Caleb \vroe Wolf, This Earth of Ours, pp-.221-222
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6
The to\~'s topography is a result of this glacial deposition
and subsequent sea action. A third but important factor has
been the human element. Bed rock is not exposed in the toi'ln
and is probably so deep below the surface tha t the removal
of t he detrital mantle \'lould mean the abandonment of Winthrop
to the sea.
The Drumlins of Eastern Winthrop Some geologists believe
that drumlins,of 1-vhich there are quite a few in Winthrop,have
been formed by the deposition of glacial drift upon a rock
core. The levelling of Governor's Island in Boston Harbor
during the extention of Logan International Airport(fig.l)
revealed such a rock core. Extensive excavations at the
base of Great Head(fig.2)in Winthrop,hovtever,as vtell as
natural marine erosion that has reduced the drumlin to almost
half its former size have failed to reveal such a core.
The principle drumlins of Winthrop and their elevations
are Great Head(l02 feet),Point Shirley(53 feet),Fort Heath
(72 feet),Summit Avenue(84 feet),and Upland Road(9lfeet)(fig.3)
These drumlins have a general northwest-southeast trend.
Like most drumlins,they are steeper at the sides than at the
ends as is well illustrated by the street pattern of the tovnl.
This is particularly noticeable in the case of the Summit
Avenue drumlin in the Highlands(fig2).
Summit Avenue runs along the longitudinal axis of the
drumlin, connecting at either end vrith Revere Street and
Grovers Avenue(fig.2). The steepness of t he sides has pro
hibited the continuation of Cross Street(fig.2),which runs
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FIG.4
Viou of o.outheast oide of ..,.rea.t ice !'il:>e an ce,. ont duct ex;. oood
sion.
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FIG.5 ---.....----....__..- - '-./ ~...._,_____, ~'--"''""""-"" ... ~~-""-"'"'
-of northoast oido of otico slump-· nc; to.!'"1ng
) O • 13; _ oo ion 10.a ea.tly t.;.io d1:--um~1n.
6b
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FIG.6
LOCAT I ON AND EXTENT, PAST AND PP..ESENT, OF DRU1~INS
OF vHNTHROP
\) 0
p FEET 2090
N
1
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from the base of the side and continues at right angle to
the longitudinal axis 'until it terminates at Locust Street
(fig.2),a street parallel to Summit Avenue but on a lower
slope.
The Summit Avenue drumlin terminates abruptly on its
southern flank \'i'here there is a depression called "the pit".
This is the point \·There the Highla.nds area terminates and
the low-lying area that splits the town in ti•To begins. To
the west of t h is flat area are the lov;er hills of the western
part of \'linthrop.
The Fort Heath drumlin,which terminates to the east as
Grover's Cliff,consists mainly of unmodified till or boulder
clay which ioJ"as deposited directly by the glacier. This is
also true of the Great Head drumlin,although the base of this
drumlin exhibits some evidence of imperfect stratification.
vlhether the lenticular forms of the drumlins of Winthr9p
has resulted from the initial nature of the de position or from
the sculpturing of initially l a id deposits of frozen till by
a r eadvancing glacier is not certain.
After their forw.ation by the glacier·, the island drumlins
of vlinthrop i·Tere subje cted to severe marine erosion; and large
quantities o:f :fine sediments '\<J"ere freed. These were carried
by offshore currents to the north and south. Those carried
s outh from the Highla nds drumlins coalesced with the sedi
ments carried north from the Great Head drumlin to form the
Ocean Spray(fig.2)barrier beach. Sediments were caPried south
from Great Head and north from Point Shirley to form the
7
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FIG.7
View of Point Shirley. Picture from Great Head·.
7a
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tombolo connecting these two drumlins. Thus,also,Deer
Island has been tied to the s outhern tip of Point Shirley.
This last example of the t earing and building process
of the s ea is of particular interest since it occuri"e.d in
historic times. As late as 1813, the strait betvleen Point
Shirley and Deer Island was deep enough,at least at high
tide,to accommodate the f amed frigate Constitution as she
escaped the British blockade of Boston Harbor. This is a
quasi-historical incident,the veracity of I.Yh ich is doubted
by most historians;but t he story would hardly have been
conceived 1vere the passage not navigable. Hence we may
estimate the depth of the Gut at some 22 feet,the draught
of the Constitution*. Deer Island was at that time a good
stone's throw from Point Shirley. Almost a centur·y later
the Gut viaS still navigable by f a irly large s t eamers. In
1920,the depth of the Gut at high tide 11as about six fe e t
and a decade later only three feet. A fel'l' ye s.rs later the
passage had been built up so t hat the depth at high tide
\·~as onl y some tl"lO feet; but fishermen still navigated the
strait in small craft,occasionally tossing a fish to some
youngster on the Point Shirley side. By the swnmer of 1935,
all t hat remained of the Gut was a. fe,.; inches of 'rra.te r at
high tide. 2 In 1940,attempts to have the Gut restored by
dredging were defeated,a.nd the Point and Deer Island are
n ow permanently joined by a causeway.
o)io At present the Constitution tti:p>~'\f& 18i feet of water fo~Tard and 21 feet of water aft. It is estimated that in her prime she drew 22 feet.
8
2. Edvmrd Rmve Snow, The Islands of Boston Harbor, PP·276-286
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Besides the six drumlins that dominate the relief of
the eastern part of Winthrop,there is a t the western end
of the Summit Avenue drumlin the circular works that domi
nate Fort Banks(fig.2). This steep grassy · hill,which rises
to a height of about 52 feet,is hollow and once contained
powerful long-range artillery pieces which once commanded
the entrance to Boston Bay.
The Vnrshes The connecting of the drumlins of the
Highlands area to Grea t Head left a lagoon between the
barrier beach and the western part of \'linthrop. Into t h is
lagoon,mud was carried in suspension by tidal currents
entermng f rom the south. This mud was derived from the
dis~ntegration of 'till from the drumlins by 1vave action.
About a t h ird of t his till was composed of quartz,and this
formed the sand of the barrier beach. The remaining two
thirds became the mud Y.Thich, in combination with marsh
grO\·Tths and driftine; sand from the barrier beach, accumu
lated to form the salt marsh \·rhich no'\v includes the golf
course,Miller's Field and Vets'Field. It is a low-lying
area with an elevation of about nine feet and practically
no relief. The inlet i-Yhich once pene trated the marsh ha s
been filled in at its sea entrance;and the "\·raters of the
upper end of the bay, thus contained,nm·T constitute LevTis
Lake(fig.2). A tidal sluiceway prevents the stagnation of
the lake. The lake is mildly saline and fre quently fre e zes in
wintertime,affording excellant iceskating opportunitie s.
9
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I
FIG.8
• ,.; ..
i .. u of tho central loula.nd re~\ of 1 ,...o~..,.~d "ootbo-11 st -..<:". um is 0 olfLi.nlts . Lov:1,.s ccn 'bo oocn . juot a.bo"to stendo • In f re:·r ,und . on. nou boin dovolo::od nto nport s area ,. In
03..c: .... ound cun be tv:>on G..; ... ,A~t H o.d. an . lou- _y·· !'l.$ h il o of oo thw(~at .lin, ~- ·op.
9a
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Around the lake has been developed a golf course. Drainage
of the beach area to the east of the golf links is not into
Broad Sound,as one might expect. Instead,it is into a series
of ditches at the golf course and thence into Le-vris Lake.
This is because relief decreases to the west only a few yards
from the sea vrall.
The northern end of the marsh served as the town dump for
many years and has now been completely filled . There is now
under construction athletic facilities "itvhich will include t\Jo
softball diamonds,a baseball field,a basketball court,a tennis
court,and an iceskating rink. These in combination '!;·l i th the
football and track field and golf course already present will
make this area a large athletic center for a . town of such a
small size.
The same processes which led to the creation of the salt
marsh behind the Winthrop Beach barrier beach also worked to
build up the large Belle Isle salt marsh. In this instance
the sediment-carrying tidal waters flowed from the west. That
part of the marsh '\ITithin Winthrop is bounded to the northwest
by Belle Isle Inlet and Short Beach Creek. The marsh is criss
crossed by ditches for drainage purposes. At the constriction
vrhere the inlet empties into Boston Harbor,a ··pm'lerful current
develops with the change of the tides. Ther e are no rivers or
streams in the tovm except for the ditches mentioned.
The Shore Line Winthrop Beach extends from Great Head
to the south to the Highlands to the north. At its southern
10
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f .
FIG.9
= - • • • • -- - -... ••
\
Mll"'f',at·i of f'inthrop Eoo.ch ioo 1ng to t o o _tr mo left Ct~;n be soon t1:10 of t he f _
.: <:>.e.k"· aters t hat ,:>rotoot t he oout ncrn end t 10 boa.ol'l . The spit t mt con __ octs t~-e b .... a.lr• \.ra.tor to t ho shoro a.t lott t do c· ... n · oe n . In bac .. round, dom1nat od b-J t ho ota.nd.p1,.. ,:i.s Gr0 t Hea-d . Beyond. Groa.t Hee-d cc.."'l o neon Door Island • .~:ro.t_co tho conca.va a ea. uall a.na tha "!'/t·ro .1 t t iva that ha.vo rocontly rXllon ... onst rt,:tat od .
lOa
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FIG.lO
,
-r of northern ond of l1nvhro ..,, l3oa.ch, FOl"t~~Ml a G;. over ' a vl1ft l oo in north fr·om f ~oro D ... 1 • Notice .riprap stro'\'m. in front , of soa"t·Ta.ll. :'"'Cnder1n,::.> the beach al oat ua lean at t 11s oint.
lOb
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end,which is protected by a breakwater,the beach is quite
wide and sandy,reaching its greatest width at Sturg is
Street {fig.2) '\-Ihere it is some 250 feet wide at mean tide
level. At lo'\',r tide a spit connects the brealnrater to the
beach. As one travels northward there is a sudden transi
tion,and the beach is strewn with rock debris for about
2,000 feet. These rocks are generally rounded and smooth
due to their constant movement under the influence of the
tides. The grinding process of the sea is even more fully
a ppreciated vlhen one comes upon an occasional housebrick
that has been worn to ellipticity. The pebbles that comprise
this debris vary considerably,roughly averaging between
three to six inches in diameter. The debris starts at
Ocean Avenue(fig.2) and gets hi&~er towards the north. In
the vicinity of Pearl Avenue{fig.2),some 1,400 feet further
on,the rock debris is at its highest,completely covering
the granite stairways that lead to the beach and obscuring
11
the sea'\·tall. Thus it becomes immediately obvious that this
par~ of the beach has been greatly built up in the last few
decades. The sea bottom between the breakwater and the .s hore
has been built up,resulting in a modification of the bottom
slope. This has caused a seaward movement and progradation of
the shoreline. The successive beach ridges of rock debris
formed in this sea~rrard movement :b..a.ve been piled up into one
massive heap by storm waves. At summertime this part of the
beach is quite popular with sunbathers even thou3h by noontime
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the rocks have become almost unbearably heated by the sun.
The area should prove equally popular vii th petrographers.
Granites,syenites,and diorites are among the interesting
varieties represented in the beach debris. A pebble of
Chelmford granite when split open revealed a t"'i'O inch long
rectangular lense of slash biotite.
From the point of greatest accumulation of rock debris,
the quantity and size of the pebbles tapers off,coming to
12
an end at the foot of Trident Avenue(fig.2)some 600 feet to
the north. The beach becomes constantly narrower,and at this
point it is only some ten feet wide. The forces that built
up the rock debris are absent here,and this part of the
beach appears to be undergoing submergence. The sea bottom
dips sharply,and at high tide one finds himself over his
head only a fel'i' feet from the sea vrall. The base of the
recently constructed concave sea i'Tall has been exposed as
have the steel reinforcing rods in the wall itself. ~he new
sea "11all is thJ?ee feet higher than the old one and is being
extended.
A little beyond t h is point,the beach again resumes its
sandy character. A considerable portion of the beach is
render ed useless because of riprap that has been placed
at the base of the sea wall for its protection. The beach
is quite narrow and does not begin to widen again until a
little beyond the foot of Locust Street(fig.2). At this
point the barrier beach section comes in contact with the
drumlin area of the Highlands. The sea wall,therefore,rises
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'
'
'
FIG.ll
ck debris exposed at low tide. In the kground are Fort Heath and Grover'sClif
12a
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13
perceptibly from Locust Street to its terminating point
over the old narrow guage railway bed at Beach Road(fig.2)
This railv;ay bed was protected from the sea by a wall of
iron pilings. These are still stand ing;but at one point
there is a brea k,and the bed is covered with beach sand
thro\·Tn up by storm waves.
These iron pilings connect the sea '\vall protecting the
barrier beach with the sea wall protecting the shore line
of the Highlands area. Low tide at t h is point reveals a ·'
saxolithic world inhabited by crabs, periwinkles,sea-worms,
etc. The rocks are covered with barnacles and slippery rock
i•teed. Beneath the roclm in black silt di'lell mussels and
clams. This same rocky c ondition exists at the foot of Great
Head at t he other end of Winthrop Beach. After storms the
entire shore line a rea is littered with razor clams,crab
shells,sea vleed,starfish,etc. On rare occasions s ponges and
huge starfish measuring eight inches in diameter have been
washed ashore.
The large stretches of boulders exposed at the bases of
the Highlands drumlins and the Great Head drumlin indicate
their former extent. As the sea eroded these drumlins,the
rocks perched at various levels ·were more or less dropped
in situ,.· Thus we see that Great Head was once probably almost
t1·lice its present size. Some of the rocks exposed are of
enormous size. One of these, just off Fort Heath, is lmm·m as
Devil 1 s Rock. A cement stairway had been built on either side
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13a
FIG. l~
I
Dov1l ' n ock
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of the rock,connecting the bea ch with the top of the sea wall.
Hmvever,marine erosion has eaten into the mortar,and a gap
has been left betvreen the rock and the stairvtay. At one stage
in t h is marine erosion,the sea had carved a small sea cave
into the the stairway.Dev~l's Rock measures approximately six
feet wide and about seven feet high and long. A few hundred
yards to the northeast are two other large rocks,Piano and
Fort. Piano is the larger,dwarfing even Devil's Rock. What
may be signs of terrace leveling appear on the side of Piano
Rock facing the east. These boulders are glacial erratics.
Grover's Cliff,whose bluffs rise suddenly from the litto
ral zone,is about 400 yards northeast of the termination point
of the \vinthrop Beach sea wall. Piano and Fort rocks lie about
fifty feet off the tip of the cliff.The bluffs are partially
protected by an old sea \'fall and by large granite blocks laid
flush to the slope. The upper part of the cliff on the south
east side is severely eroded and displays a serrated profile.
The littoral zone at the base of the cliff,unlike the black
silt a felv hundred yards to the south"''Test, is composed of a
gray clay. As one rounds the tip of the cliff and heads up
14
the western side,the bluffs get higher. Erosion has been fairly
·vvell checked at some points on the slope by grass and small
trees. Further on, 'Vvhere this vegetative cover is lacking ,
seve re erosion of the cliff is going on. During periods of
thavring .in the '\vinter, small rivulets of mud flow do.wn the
slope and accumulate on the shore below.
The beach between Great Head and the southern end of
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Point Shirley is generally quite s andy. The sand in recent
years ha s accumula ted in such quant i ty so as to obscure much
of the sea \vall. At low tide two long spits protrude into the
sea from the southeast base of Great Head.
The harbor side of Winthrop is at lmv tide a vast mud
flat. It was not always so. The littoral zone was once of
a gravelly and sandy nature. Indeed,the area between Winthrop
and Sna ke Island(fig.2) was once commercially exploited for
its sand and gravel. The silting of the area is due largely
to the closing of Shirley Gut and the constnuction of Logan
Internationa l Airport.
The Ground Moraine of Western WinthroE The glacie r that
formed the drumlins of Ea stern Vfinthrop deposited considerable
amounts of ground moraine to the west,forming the main or
western part of t he tovm. The hills are of a gentle nature,
a lth ough there are several steep slope s. The area :b..as VThat
ma y be termed a swell and swale topography. The r e are a number
of s ma ll depressions. The northcentral part of the area was
once a Svlamp but has been filled and is lmo1-m as Ingleside
Park(fig.2).The fill was pumped in f r om the harbor. The hi~~est
elevation encounte red in ':lestern \•linthrop is a bout 47 fe et.
Within the limits of the tovm is Snake Island.It lies some
400 feet off the southern coast of Western Winthrop. It has
an area of about three and a half acres and a maximum eleva
tion of t'\velve feet.At low tide it is possible to \vade out
to the island.
15
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Climate and Weather
Winthrop has a humid continental type of cliw~te
subject to the moderating effects of the sea that sur
rounds her. In summertime the extreme heat that prevails
in general over the northeastern part of the United
States is mitigated in Winthrop by off-shore bree zes.
16
In '\vinter the sea, being warmer than the land, tends to give
Winthrop higher tempreratures than those found inland;
but the increase in humidity makes the \finds vmt and
unpleasant. The difference in tempera ture between Winthrop
and towns ten or twenty miles in the interior is often
mo~e than twenty degrees Fahrenheit.
Being subject to marine influences,Winthrop experiences
a temperature lag. An excellant example of this lag are the
i'laters of Broad Sound. These waters are cooled by the
Labrador Current. During spring and early summer,the waters
tend to be extremely cold,driving many,despite the miles
of beache s in the town, to the warmer i'laters of t h e beaches
on the Cape. The cold of the water is made more noticeable
by the heat of the air. By late August and September,the
sea has had a chance to warm up,and bathing usually is
pleasant. Also,the air temperature is not so high. Thus
the difference bet\'leen air and sea temperature in early
summer is as much as 30 degrees Fahrenheit and in late
fall as little as 5 or 10 degrees Fa~~enheit. This,of
course, does not apply to the shallOi'lTer \'laters on the harbor
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side and the vmters of Belle Isle Inlet. These tend to
be heated by the mud flats,which are exposed to the sun
a t low tide.
During the summer,cool sea breezes transform hot,
oppressive days to ones of delightful coolness . Hmvever,
in early spring this easterly i·rind can make days which
to begin with were pleasant, quite uncomfortable,tempera
tures dropping more than twenty degrees FaP~enh? it a t
times in a few hours.
17
Winthrop's mean yea rly tempera ture is fifty degrees
Fahrenhe it. The mean ·tempera tur e for January is twenty
eight degrees Fahr enheit and for July seventy two degree s
Fahi"enheit,making the annual range some forty four degrees
Fahrenheit. The yearly precipitation is some 40.05 inches.
The wettest and driest months follow each other with
August rece iving 3.74 and September 3.04 inches. There is
a remarkably uniform distribution of rainfall during the
year on a mean monthly basis,but extremes in precipitation
occur often. The annual precipitation in the form of snow
is forty four inches and is included in the figure for
the total annual precipitation given above~
In winter great storms occur. Beach debris of consi-
dera ble size is hurled by the heavy surf over the s ea wall,
inflicting heavy damage to homes. The area is often flooded
3. Thomas A. Blair,ClimatologY,pp.235-238.
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and beach sand is carried hundreds of yards from the beach.
Th is is because once past the cro\'m of Shore Drive( f'ig .2),
there is a decrease of' elevation to the vrest. The breakers
hit the concave sea Y.mll '•Ji th tremendous force, jarring the
entire beach area and throwing water h igh above the houses.
The spray can be seen above the trees and houses from as
far aiiay as the corner of Revere and Shirley Streets (fig.2)
Follovling an intense storm, the sea remains rough for many
days. It is then that many people gather at the northern
end of the drive to view these spectacular breakers. The
nev; and higher concave sea wall seems to have made the
bi"eake r s even more spectacular. See figure 20'.
Occasionally mirages can be observed off the coast.
These optical phenomena are due to the disturbance oi' the
normal index of refraction. This causes the reflection of
islands in the outer harbor.
Winthrop has its own microclimatology based on its
topography. The business section of the Centre area,being
located in a hollow,tends to get much hotter than the
higher sections of the town. This is because it is not
as effectively reached by the sea breezes.
The tmm' s climate has a Koeppen classification of
Cfa(b)*. In Appendix I are tables giving the mean monthly
18
and annual temperatures and rainfall for Boston. These should
prove adeauate for Winthrop. * C- Coldest month between 64.4 and 26.9 degrees Fahrenheit
f- No month belmv 1.2 inches precipitation a- Warmest month above 71.6 degrees Fahrenheit b- Vlarmest month belm-v 71.6 de grees Fahrenheit but at
least four months avobe 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
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The Town's History
In pre-colonial times Indians of the Pawtucket Tribes
dv-1elt on the tiny seae;irt peninsula that stretched into
Boston Bay. They dwelt amidst the urunarred rustic s plendor
of an area endo·v1ed by nature vr i th vrooded :knolls_:, salt marshes,
inlets, beaches, S'\'ramps, and meadows. \•lars, pestilence, the \vhi te
man ,and migrations gradually reduced t he ir numbers. Now they
are but a memory . From time to time archeological relics of
"linthrop' s Indians have been uncovered.
In 1634, Boston,finding itself confined to a small penin
sula and blocked b;y- land to the south by Roxbury, be ·:;an to
expand to the north. This expansion v1as mainly by \'Tater , and
it was not long before \ni inthrop was absorbed.
The first settlement of the town was by a herdsman in
1635. He cared for cattle which were sent by the people of
Boston to the peninsul a for pasturing from April to November.
About t h is time, the area vias called Pullen Point, an a ppella
tive description derived from the fact that fishermen found
it difficult to pull their boats throu.sh Shirley Gut due to
the strong tidal current. By 1637,Winthrop had been parti
tioned among fifteen people; and v-r:b..at is nmv the sixth oldest
house in Ne1·r England , t he Deane \vinthrop House, had been built.
In 1739, Chelsea broke avmy from Boston,and itlinthrop
became a part of this new tovm the same year. During the
Revolutionary War,the town served as t he protective flank
19
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20
for the left wing of the Continental Army,which was beseig-
ing Boston. A year later occurred the naval battle of Shirley
Gut. Durlns the War of 1812, r e sidents vie\ved from the hills
of the peninsula the battle bet\veen the Chesapeake and the
Shannon.
Winthrop remained a pa rt of the town of Chelsea until 1846.
From 1846 until 1852, \1f inthrop ' 'laS a part of the newly formed
town of North Chelsea (now Revere). In 1852, Winthrop \vas in-4 \
corporated as a town.
FIG.l3
Y.T of the Deane Winthrop House, the s i~'oo:-~ .... est house in Ne11 England. The house wa
built in 1637 by William Pierce,captain of the ship Lion. The house is on Shirley Street not far f r om the c onfluence of that street with Revere Street. Behind the house rise the hills of the Hi&~lands
4. William H. Clark,History of Winthrop,pp.30l-304·.
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Characteristics of Winthrop's Population
Population and Density Vfith some 19,496 residents
in only 1.6 square miles of territory,Winthrop ranks as
the sixth most densely populated community in the Cormmon
vreal th. There are probably fel'r places in the '\'lorld as
densely populated yet containing within such a small area
miles of beaches,a golf links,a lake,mud flats,a broad salt
marsh,two government forts,and a large athletic center.
With the exception of two decades,the population of
the tol'rn has increased constantly e~er since the residen
tial possibilities vTere realized. The decline in popula
tion between 1860-1870 l'ras due to the failure of the couuer
'\vorks at Point Shirley. The poor economic conditions
bet-vreen 1930-1940 were the reason for the slight decrease
in population during that decade. There is every reason
to believe that the population will continue to increase ,
although at a reduced rate. A rate of inc rease equal to
t~~t of previous decades is contingent on possible avenues
of grmvth to be discussed under uThe Future 11• Each su..TilTD.er
the population of the to'\~ is augmented by many summer
residents. Hovrever the trend is more and more towards per
mamant residency. A table shm-Ting the population trend of
the town follows on the next page.
21
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e .
Population Table Covering Period from 1860-1950
Change fr.om Year Population Preceeding Census Density/sq. mile
1950 19,496 2,728 12,185
1940 16,768 -84 10,480
1930 16,852 1,397 10,532
1920 15,455 5,323 9,659
1910 10,132 4,074 6,332
1900 6,058 3,333 3,786
1890 2,726 1,685 1,704
1880 1,043 511 652
1870 532 -12 332
1860 544 340
Winthr op's Foreign-Born Element Of the 19,496 inhabi
tants of t he town in 1950,some 13.4% or 2,618 were foreign
born. This represents a decrease o1· 3.1% under the figure
for 1940,\'lhich was 2,769. Ho\'rever,people of f oreign birth
still repre sent a sizeabl e part of the tm'ln' s population.
Leading all nations a s the point of origin is Canada . Next
come the u . s .s.R.,England,and Italy. Tables showing a break
down of Winthrop~s foreign-born population in 1940 and 1950
22
a ppear on the next pa ge. To be noted is the decrease of people
born in England and an i ncrease of the Italian born,the fi gur e
for England be ing 3 .2% less and the figur e for Ita ly 4.4% more.
This is indicative of the influx of Italians from East Boston
that is occurring.
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Table Showing Country of Origin of \vinthrop 1 s5
Fore ign-Born Population for Years 1940&1950 -
Country of % of Total No . Origin Number pf Fo~e+gn-Bo~~
1940 1950 194o - -· '.- ---1950 '"
Canada 676 615 24.42 23.14
u.s .s .R-:t 593 620 21.42 23.33
England 355 251 12.83 9.60
Italy 216 320 7.80 12.24
Eire 181 173 6.54 6.61
Scotland 102 87 3.68 3.32
Poland 76 75 2.74 2.86
Greece 73 76 2.60 2.90
SvTejden 58 48 2.10 1.80
Lithuania 47 37
Canada(French) 45 53
Germany 44 53
Austria 41 34
N.Ireland 38 5
Norvmy 37 29
23
Canada's percentage is 7% higher than that for the state.
The figure for the U.s.s.R. is 14% higher. Eire's figure is 6%
below t hat for the state. Italy's figure is about the same as
that for the state. A more complete analysis of the foreign-born population
of Winthrop a ppears in Appendix II. * Most of the people from the U.s.S.R. in \'linthrop are of Je\vish Faith. 5. Bureau of Census , Population:Volume III,Character,stics of the Population Part 3,p.622
Bureau of Census,Volume III Census Tract Statistics for 1950, p .33.
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24
Residential Characteristics Winthrop is a t01..Yn of homes.
Within the town's 1,075 acres are some 4,000 homes,representing
5,800 d\'relling units. Nost of these houses i·Tere built prior
to 1920,and each suceeding decade has s een a decrease in new
home construction. However,th is must not be t aken as a sign
of decline. Rather the town has almost exhausted possible
building sites. At the Point,the pressure of population r~s
forced the tearing dorm of Taft's Inn,the famous eating house
v1her·e such men as Holmes,Lov;ell,Emerson,and Longfello}.Y gathered.
Some thirty houses are being constructed there.
Most of the houses of the town are wooden single or tvw
family homes. The Thornton Park area(fig.2) is domina ted by
houses of the traditional Ne\v England style , while the Grea t
Head and Winthrop Bea ch areas are characterized by permanent
type cotta13e homes. In the latter,about 60% of the homes ·v1ere
built prior to 1920,and about 10% of them are s~~mer homes. In
Thornton Park some 85% of the homes were built prior to 1920,
and most of t he se are year round residences~
The Centre area is the only section of the town t hat ex-
perienced an increase in home c onstruction in the period from
1940 to 1950 as compared to the previous decade. Most of these
new homes have been loca ted in the northwestern part of Winthrop
vlhich overlooks the salt mars!). and Belle Isle Inlet. The beauty and comfort of the tm·Tn are greatly enhanced
by the .many graceful elms and maples that line the streets.
6. Bureau of the Census,Volume III Census Tract Statistics f or 1950.p.ll3
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FIG.14
THE AVERAGE VALUE OF HOMES IR 1triNTI-LT-toP IN 1950 7
COURT PARK
CENTRE
~ $12,000-12,500
0 $11,000-12,000
$10,500-11,500
$ 9,000-10,000
$ 8, 500-9,500
HIGHLANDS
~ THORNTON 0
PARK
7. Bureau of Census,Census of Po~u1at1on 1950,Vo1ume 3, Census Tract Statistics,Chapter ,p.ll3
24a
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FIG:-.15
TB3 AVERAGE INCOfJIE OF THE PEOPLE OF vHNTHROP I N 19508 .
CENTRE
c=:J $3 ,800-4,000
r===J $3,400-3,600
C:::l $3,200-3,400
$3,000-3,200
$2,800-3,000
24b
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I
;
;
FIG.l6
iew of Taft's Inn,once one of the most mous eating places in the world,as it loo
in 1952 at which t i me it was being torn down. Notice gravelly P~ture of the soil. This is chara cteristic of much of Point Shirley. In left f oregr oUlLd is old pier on southwest coast of Point.
24c
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However,due to the nature of the soil and the strong "\'linda
and saline waters that sweep in from the sea,there are
c onspicuously few trees at Point Shirley and the Winthrop
Beach area.
The Religions· of Winthrop 1 s People. The three main
religious groups,the Catholics,the Protestants,and the
Je..,.;s are well represented in vlinthr op. Of these the Catholic,
by reason of the recent influx of people of Italian dec ent,
is in the ascendency and bids well to become the majority
religion of the town in the near future. At present,the
Protestants,although outnumbered by the Catholics and J ews
combined,represent the majority group. The denominational
schism present on the national level,manifests itself among
25
the Protestants of the town. The largest of these Protestant
denominations is the ~-'lethodists, who established the first church
of the town in 1834. They count some 1,000 members. The
Episcopalians number approximately 500. Other organized
churches are those of the Baptists,Congregationalists,and
Christian Scientists. These have a few hundred members each •
.All of t hese Protestant churches are in the western part of
Winthrop except that of the Congregationalists,which is lo
cated at the southern end of \\Tinthrop Beach.
The first Catholic church was built in 1887. From then
on Cat holicism increased in Winthrop,and in 1923 a large
new church was built near the geographic center of the town.
In 1952 a parochial school -vms opened, indicating the c ont inued
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.·,
FIG.l7
DISTRIBUTimN OF RELIGIOUS GROUPS IN WINTI1ROP IN -1953
~ Predominatly Jewish
._____..[ Predominatly Catholic
1 -~ --:~: I
CB D
Predominatly Protestant
lfdxed Cat holic,Protestant, & Jewish
Mixed Catholic & Protestant
25a
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of the church in the to,~. There is another Catholic church
at Point Shirley. This church is called St.Mary's by the Sea
and is open in the _summer. It is indicative of t he fairly
large Irish population of the Point.
26
The religious needs of the more than 800 Jewish families
in the to1ill are serviced by two synagogues located in the
beach section. There are a bout 300 Greek Orthodox in Winthrop,
but they are not of sufficient numbers to have their O\nl
church.
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Economy
Th e econ omic periods that Winthrop has exper•ienced
are(l)th e hunting and fishing econ omies of the I nd i a n s ,
( 2) the agricu l t ·ural e c onomy of t h e seven teen t h and
eighteenth centuries , (3) t he i ndustri a l-ae;ricultura l eco
nomy of the ninete enth century , (L~) tlJ.e r e sort and
agricu ltural ec onomy· of the l a tter o a rt of t he nine t een t h
century , and (5) the urb an economy of t h e p resent.
The Ind i an Econ omy 'rhe Indi ans of t·Jinth rop p r a ctised
27
a crude typ e of farmi ng , grmrfing be ans, cor n , and s qu a sh.
The se 1-Jere , h ovJever, of secon d a r y i n p ortance , s inc e \-Tin throp 1 s
shore ab ounde d in cl ams , fi sh , an d othe r p r odu c t s of the s e a .
Al so , the h i l l s wore al i ve with wild l ife, i n clud ing t h e
deer, Hild turlcey s , an d phe a sants .
Th e Agricul tural Economy of t he 17 t h & 1 8 t h Centur i e s .
By 1 6 3 7 , t h e t own h a d be en d iv i ded Eunong it s f ift e e n ori g ina l
m·me r s . Gr azing and far mi ng became t he p rin c ip l e e conomic
a c t i v i t i es . A f ew y e a rs be f ore, t he p e op l e of Bost on had
s ent c a ttle to thA peninsul a f or p a sturing .
For more t han a centurf Wi nthr oo c ont i nued as es s entially
an agr icultural corn.mu n i t ;' . Then for' a br i ef p e r i od ( l 7 53- 63)
Po int Shirle] b e c u.J1.18 t he s cene of a fi she r ie s enterp l~ i se .
Althou r;h the fi she r i o s at f i r s t s eemed to fl ouri s h , i t s o on
fail e d . The 3 0 0 n eeD l e w~o h a d b een a ttra c ted to the ? oin t
b ~ t he f i s h er i es s l owl y dr i f t e d ~wa~ . ~he extens i v e bui l dings
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of t h e c ompany fell to ruin , and Poin t Shirley \,ms on ce again
left b arren excep t f or a f eH f amilies t hat linger e d on. :Nany
de c ades v.re re t o pa.ss b efore t h e to1-·m 1 s p opul ati on HOl.J.ld e qual
t hat of 1752-63. Gen era l farming resmne d it s a scendency .
The Industrial - Agricultural Economy ·of t h e 19th -Century
Thr oughout t h is oeriod t h e agricu ltural activities of t h e
tovm c ontinued . Bo s ton provided an e x cellant mar Let .for t h e
p roducts of her s oil- - a s oil e n rich ed by t h e use of t h e abun
dant quanti tie s of semv-eed and roc1n·reed to b e found a l ong
the sh oPe . Wool and beef ·He r e s h i ppe d to Bo s ton , fo r t h e h ills
of t h e p eni nsul a He re e x cellan t for grazing . Hay .from t he
salt marshe s Has an i mp ortant crop of t h e to1r-rn .
A se r i e s of i ndu s trial v entl.lre s we re a t t h i s t ·ime sur
char ge d up on t h e exi s ting agPicul tura l econ omy of the to1r-m .
About 1 812,a salt Hork s u as e stab lished at Poin t Shi r ley .
Se a Ha. t e p v-ra s funnelle d i n to l a r ge 1r1o oden vats by me ans of
wooden pipes . There under t h e evap orative i nfluence of t h e
s un , salt a c cumul a te d . 'lnne s alt Hork s l a sted thirty years.
I n l84l~ ,John Re vere , son of Paul Reve re of Re v olut iona r y
1'!a r fame , aqui red mos t of Po i n t Sh irley and p roceeded t o e r ect
a smelte r f or C01)rJ e r o~" e . The i n e;ot s , t h u s c as t , Here trans
n or t ed to t he Ca.nt on mi l l s of t ll.e Reve r e Cop;Je r Company to
b e rolled i n t o s h eet s . Hm,rever , a t about t :n i s time t h e Lake
0uperior distr i ct,th e s ec ond gr eatest c opp e r di s t r ict of t h e
Horld , vla s becoming h i gh l y p roduc t i ve. I t was on l :r a ma tter
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of time before a t ariff was placed on foreign copper; and
since the copper ore for -t ::.e smelting vwrks came from Chile,
the copper industry of Point Shirley was doomed. The company
cea sed a ctivities in 1872. Today the slag from the sme lters
can be found in plentiful quantities along the beach next
to the softball field. Like the fishery, the copper vrorks
caused a shift of the town's population to the Point.
A Resort and Agricultural Community (1870-1890) These t'i'l"O
decades saw the building of a considerable number of summer
homes. Early in the pe riod, the barrier beach that curves
between Grover's Cliff and Great Head became the site of
a summer resor•t to be l{nown as Ocean Spray. A short time
later swnmer cottages \·re re also built on Great Head to the
south. Hinthrop had definitely become a summer resort. Each
summer the tovm 1 s population was greatly augmented by summer
residents.
29
During much of this period, agricultural activity continued.
The soil of t he town had been constantly revita lized ; and after
more than two centuries of cultivation, t he yields were still
excellent. · The tovm began this period as a tm,m of farmers.
As the period ended, the pressure of popula tion had seve rely
r educed agricultural activity. Today almost every available
piece of land is devoted to house lots, and only an occasional
ga rden is to be seen •
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The Urban Economy of 1890-1953 This period can be classi
fied a s the Narrow Guage . Period. For it "•vas the building of
this loop rail\·Jay that made possible the creation of a town
of homes as 1tlinthrop is today. 'i'Tith Vlinthrop in such close
proximity to Boston, it is remarlmble that the town remained
a farming community as long as it did. This v-1as due to a l a ck
of ade c~.uate transporta tion. The narro,,r guage r a i lroad came
in 1888 to fill this need. The line looped. the town. Thus
the rest of Winthrop l.Yas quickly developed in the early part
of the present century.
Being a dependent residential suburb, \'Tinthrop o-v;es its
existence as e. tovrn of any considerable size to the City of
Bo s ton. If the o pportunity for e mr)loyment outside the tO\<Tn
1:1ere \vithdrm·m, commun ity prosperity 1·1ould col l apse. I1ost of
the residents vrould be forced to migrate from the tm.,rn . :Jiost
of the inhabitant s of the tovm make their livlihood in Bo s ton,
which also serves as a c enter for sho pping, entertainment, and
study.
Commercial Activities in \'linthro D Servicing the needs
of \•linthrop ' s 20, OOOpeo pl e are t1<To main retail districts and
three les ser one, containing in a ll some 150 stores . A majori
ty of these stox•es a re c onc entra ted in the lo\·lland area of
\vestern \vinthrop , a nd this area is lmo,,m a s the Centre Sihopping
district. The second maJ· or retail district o~s in th t ..~.. ~ e ea s ern
part of Winthrop . It runs along the western side of Shirley
30
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31
Street for about 3,000 feet and then spreads to both sides
of the street near the base of Great Head.
At the confluence of Winthrop,Main,and Revere Streets
is I~gee's Corner(fig.2). This is one of three s e condary
or satelitic retail districts. It includes 10 stores. A
second retail district(? stores) is on Crest Avenue(fig .2)
in the Hi ghlands. A thil~ secondary reta il district(? stores) .
is on \'linthrop Street just off Metcalf Square (fig .2) . There
is no retail shopping district on Point Shirley.
About 8% of Winthrop's 1rmrlring population is employed
in the retail businesses of the to~m. Even this percen
tage,of course,depends on the a bility of the others to make a
living outside of the town.
As has been mentioned, there are only t vvo exits f r om
the town. This causes a funelling of traf fic so that in
a mile and a half stretch running from t he Main Street
bridge to Beachmont there are eight gasoline stations.
Although the value of manufactures in Winthrop has in
creased considerably in the last fifteen years,the indus
tl"'ial activity in the tmm is on a limited scale. rJJany resi
d ents,despite the small size of the town,are unaware that
such activity exists. Only about 1% of the working popula
tion is enga ged in manufacturing. Products range from indi
v idual tea bag tags and confectionery products,to business
forms and publishing salesbooks. Some commercial clamm.ing
and lobstering is car ried on within Winthrop's waters and
mudflats.
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FIG.18
TRANSPORT AT ION: l'-1AP
Stage Coach(1848-1873) -- Stage Coach(1878-1889) --- Horse Street Raih;ay (1873-1877)
Narrow Guage(1877-188e) - - steamboats {1890-1900)
\ ' \
' \
--··-· -- -~\
J
~ \ 0
'
;~ --Standard Guage 83-1887) ~ ~ ---- Narrow Guage Loop Railroad(l888~1940)/
Bus Line(l940-1953)
\
\
\
I
\
I
I
31a
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Transportation
Boston had long since reached its zenith,when Winthrop
became subject to a gradua l metamorphasis that vwuld change
the peninsula from an essentially agricultural community to
a hi3hly urbanized suburb. What '\·ras to bring this about v.ras
a series of improvement s in transportation. The first ma jor
improvement came in 1873 when a horse street railroad vras
built. After over two centuries of comparative isolation,
the tovm had been brougJ1t much closer to Boston. The horse
street r a ilroad \·las replaced in 1877 by a narrovr guage rail
road. In 1883 a standard guage railroad was added to the
town's transportation system. It ran until 1886. The routes
these two railroads followed indicate clearly that at this
time Winthrop was mainly a resort community;for they serviced
onl y the eastern part of t he tovm, lvhich had been developed
as an area of summer cottages. Winthrop's transportation
cu l minated with the building of the loop line of the narrow
gua ge in 1888~0The line circled the town and made possible
the development of the various sections. It cros sed Belle
Isle Inlet at its entry and exit point. From there it c on-
t inued to East Boston where the passengers transferred to
ferrie s tha t took them across the harbor. The narrow guage
loop railroad l as ted uhtil 1940,when financial diff iculties
forc ed its abandonment.
Before the advent of the various railroads, the tovm 1 s
10. Cha:n.ning Hoi•Tard, Stage Coach and Early Rail r oad Days in Winthrop Being the Story of Winthrop 1 s Transportation,pp.l-30
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tr.ansportation needs 1-rere h e.ndled by stage coach and ships.
Boston was only four miles away by sea b:p.t over tvrenty miles
a vray by l a nd . Point Shirley, which today is the most remote
part of' vfinthrop, wo,s one of the most accessible parts of
the peninsula and proportionately more valuable than today
due to the importance of water communicat i ons.
Since 1940, a bus company has been handling Winthrop's
transportation. Such a diurnal movement of population as
occurs each vmrking day presents difficult problems. There
are t1vo peale loads, and it is almost impossible to handle
everyone ade quately. ¥~ny residents travel by auto.
Compared to the difficulties of land communication to
Boston in the past,today's communications are quite adequate.
This has be en accomplished by the construction of a subway
that passes under the harbor. Those -vrho use the tO'\-rn 1 s buses
board the subway trains at Orient Hei&~ts,the terminus of the
buses. This is approximately tvw miles from \<linthrop Centre.
The trains remain on the surface,passing Loga n International
Airport, until they reach Iviaverick Station where the y ente r
the subvmy. In a ll it take s a b out tv-renty minutes to reach
dmmtovm Boston once a bus is boarded in vlinthrop. Five minutes
are consumed from vvinthrop to 0 :::-> ient He i ; hts, ten minutes from
Orient Heis hts to ¥~verick Station, a nd five minutes in the
subway under the har'qor. For those travelling by auto,Boston
is e a sily reached b y either a second tube under the harbor,the
Sunrner Tunnel,or by the recently built Jl.1ystic River Bridge.
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The problem has become the l a ck of parking space in Boston
rather than accessibility. The year 1953 savr the end of a
rather infrequently used method for crossing the harbor,the
so called 11 penny ferry".
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35
Government
The emergence of \'linthrop as a tm·m entity after
succe ssively passing under the governmental control of
Boston(l05 years),Chelsea(l05 years), Qnd Revere(6 years)
can be ascribed to three primary reasons. First of all,
the town,being a peninsula,is a natural geographic unit.
Secondly,as the city of Boston rapidly increased in size
and as transportation facilities improved,Winthrop ex-
perienced a concomit~nt inc r ease of popula tion based on
suburbanization. The third reason was one t hat moltivates
any distinct geographic unit--the desire for local autonomy
and the greater convenience in conducting local a ffairs.
Winthrop is a part of Suffolk Com~ty as are the cities
of Boston,Revere,and Chelsea . The town is governed by a
board _of, select~nen under a representative town meeting form
FIG.l9
I
- tov-m's civic center,located at Me -~~·e (fig.2).Town hall is to left,library
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The Future
There are four possible avenues t or the futtu•e growth
of the tovm. One of these is t he a quisition of t he go-.rern
ment lands in the to,·ln. Were it not for t he unsettled con
ditions on the inte r national scene,it is highly probable
that both Forth Heath and Fort Banl1:s i•rould now be available
for house sites. The Belle Isle and Short Creek rnrsh will
gradually be filled and made available f or settlement.The
golf links r epresent the t h ird possible a r e a of s ettlement.
However,since this grassy lowland are a greatly enhances the
beauty or the town,the desirability of h ome s in t h is area is
questionable. All of these areas are \'lithin the confines of
the town. A final possibility would involve territory out
side the limits o:r the town, namely Deer Island. This vJOuld
be t he most significant f uture move the tm·m c ould make, for
the area involved is considerable and s plendid for settlement.
Not only ivould t h e town 1 s population be greatly increased by.t
the a r ea also. Deer Island is four times the size of Point
Shirley to 1vhich it is joined. At present there is a house
of cor rection a nd a g ove rnment fort on the island·.
36
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Appendix I
l-1ean ~ifonthly and Annual Temperatures and Rainfall ::Jl
for Boston ~ .. -
Temperature(F) Rainfall(In~hes} January 28 3.6
February 29 3.4
:D-1arch 36 3.6
April 46 3.3
May 57 3.2
June 66 2.9
July 72 3 .5
August 70 3.6
September 63 3.1
October 54 3.2
November 42 3.3
December 32 3.4
Annual 50 40 .• 1
11. Thomas A. Blair,op.cit·. ,pp.476-477
37
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APPEND IX I I ·
Analysis of the Foreign-Born Popula t i on of 12
Wi nthr op
The Highlands The total population of the Hi ghlands
i s 3 ,874 of Hhich 554 or 14.3% a re fo re i gn bor n. Th i s i s
0.9% over the figure f or t he tovtn. %of Hi ghlands Depar t ure
Country Number Foreign-Born. From<::.To1rm%
1. U. S . S . R. 153 27.6 4.3 2. Canada 110 19.7 -6.5 3. Italy 72 12.9 0.7 4. Engl and &vlale s 53 9.5 -0.1 5. Eire 30 5.4 -1.2 6. Poland 25 4.5 1.6 7. Gre ece 21 3 .8 0.9 8 . Scot l and 19 3.4 0.1 9. Germany 14 2.5 0.5
38
vlint :b..rop Bea ch, Great Head and Point Shir l ey These areas
have a popula tion of 4, 826 or 24.7% of the to\~ 1 s total. That
part of t he population t hat i s fore i gn- born numbers 830 or
17.1%. Th i s is the h i ghe st percentage of fore i gn-born of t he
f ive sect i ons i nto which Winthrop is d ivided f or thi s anal ysis.
It i s nearl y d ouble t hat of the Court and Cotta 3e Park section.
Country Number %of For eign- De part ur e Born From Tov.m%
1. u.s .s .R. 367 44.2 20.9 2. Canada 134 16.1 - 9.1 3. Ens . &Wale s 72 8.7 - 0.9 4. Italy 44 5. 3 - 6.9 5. Eire 43 5.2 - 1.4 6. Poland 26 3 .1 0. 3 7. Gree ce 21 2.5 - 0.4 8 . Ge rmany 19 2.3 0.3 9. Lithuania 18 2.2 0.8
10. Aus t r ia 18 2.2 0.9 11. Scotland 17 2.1 - 1.2
12. Bur eau of Census, Census of Populat i on 1950,Volume 3 Census Tract Statistics, Chapter 6, p .33.
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Court and Cottage Park This section of Winthrop has
a population of 4,081 or 20.9% of the to1m's population.
Of these 386 or 9.5% are fore i gn-born. This is the lov-rest
percentage figure of the five s ections analyzed. It is 3 .9%
under the town 's fj_gure. A1Jout 14.7% of the town's foreign-
born reside here. Canada is the chie f country of origin.
%of Court & Cottage Departure
39
Country Number Park Foreign Born From Town%
1. Canada 158 40.9 15.7 2. Eng.& Wales 48 12.4 2.8 3. Italy 48 12.4 o · -=> ..... 4. Eire 32 8·.3 1".7 5. Scotland 24 6".2 2.9 6. Svreeden 16 4~4 2.6 7· u.s.s.R. 14 3 ".6 -19 .• 7 8. Norway 8 2".1 1·.o 9·. Greece 8 2.1 - o ·.8
Thornton Park Area This section contains the smallest
population of the five sections under discussion. The total
population is 2,121 or 10.8% of the town's total. Of these,
the foreign born amount to 11.3%. This section is the transi
tion ar ea between the Winthrop Beach section and the western
part of the totm. This is indicated by the figures for the
U.s.s.R. and Canada. In every other section either one or
the other of these t1vo countries has a much higher figure •
In this section they are nearly equal.
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Country Number % of Thornton Departure Park Foreign-Born From Town %
1. Canada 78 26.4 1.2 2. U.S.S.R. 71 24-.1 0.8 3. Italy 29 9·.8 -2.4 4. Eng .& Wales 29 9.8 0.2 s--. Eire 14 4.7 -1.9 6. Greece 12 4.1 1.2 T. Scotland 12 4.1 0.8 er. Poland 9 3·.o o·.1 9. Germany 8 2.7 o·.7 lO.Sweeden 6 2.0 0.2
Centre The population of t h is section is 4,594 or
23.6% of the tovm's population. Of t h is number some 522
or 12-.0% are fore i gn-born. This is 21.1% of t he fore i gn-
born total of t he tovm. The Centre is t he only section
where a country other than Canada or t he U. s .s .R. P~s come close to the leading c ountry of origin. In t hi s case
it is Italy.
Country Number % of Centre De parture Foreign-Bor n From Town %
1. Canada 183 33.1 7.9 2. Italy 126 22.8 10 .• 6 3. Eire 53 9.6 3.0 4. Eng . & vlales 49 8.9 - 0.7 5. Norway 20 3.6 2.5 6·. u.s.s.R. 15 2.7 -20.6 7-. Scotland 15 2.7 - o.6 8. S1t1eeden 14 2.5 0.7 9. Greece 14 2.5 - 0.4 10. Poland 11 1.9 - 1.0
40
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FIG.20
Storm waves breaking over s~awall at Winthrop Beach. House at right eventually '\vas dragged int the s ea. This incident hastened the building of the new concave seawall that now urotects the beach area. This photo vlas taken in 1944.
41
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Conclusion
The to\~ of Winthrop exh ibits little of t he homo
geneity,either in its physical or human make-up,which
ordinarily one vrould expect to find in an area of such
a s mall size. The people \.Yho inhabit the pen insula are
quite varied in the ir religious beliefs and ethnic ori
g in. The configuration of the land has r esulted in a
high degree of topographic diversification. There are
four unifying factors. These a re(l)the glacial origin
of t he peni nsula,(2) the influence of the sea,past and
present,(3) the small size of the area involved,and(4)
the use of the land. Of these, t he use of the land, \'lh ich
is for homes,is the paramount ··Unitying agent. Being,
therefore,a town of homes,it may de finitely be concluded
t hat the town of Winthrop is and ever will be a de pendent
residential suburb.
42
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Bibliography
Blair, 'Thomas ,A., Climatolop;_y ,Nevr York, Prentice-Hall, 1942.
Clark,William,H.,History of Winthrop,MassachUsetts,Boston Grimes Printing Co.,l952.
Howard,Channing,Stase Coach and Early Railroad Days in Winthron Being the Story of Winthro~'s Transportation,Waltham,Wells Bindery,l93
Sno1v ,Edvrard.,R., The Islands of Boston Harbor_,Andover, Iv'!ass., Andover Press,l935.
United States Department of Commerce,Bureau of Census, Sixteenth Census of the United States,Washington D.C.,United States Goverlli~ent Printing Office,l940.
United States Department of Commerce,Bureau of Census, United States Census of Population 1950, \"lashington D.C.,United States Government Printing Office,l952
Wolfe,Caleb,W.,This Earth of Ours-Past and Present, Revere, ~'!assachusetts,The Earth Science Publishing Company,l950
IV
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Abstract
Winthrop is a s mall seagirt penins ul a t hat lies
approxi mately four mile s nort heast of the city of
Boston. It is one of t he s mallest toNns in t he state
in point of size be ing only 1.6 s quare miles in a r ea. - , Hmvever, t he to".vn 1 s variegated confi3uration and e i s ht
miles of curving shoreline make t he area involved s e em
much more extensive.
Ge olog ically,the to".Vll is composed of drift de posi
ted by the glacier t hat covered t he area in the Qua
t ernary period. Th is drift v-ra s de posited in the forzn
of f ive druml i ns in t he eastern part of t he pen insula
and as undulating grom1d moraine in t he west. The drum-
lins were ext ens i vely weathered by storm waves. Sed iments,
t hus f r eed, vTe re carried nor th and s outh by offshore cur-
rent s to form a barrier bea ch, \'Tinthrop Beach, betvreen the
drumlins of the Highlands area and t he Great Head drumlin
and a tombolo be t1,reen Great Head and Point Shirley. In
recent decades Dee r Island has been joined to Point Shi r
l ey. The creation of the barrier bea ch l e ft a lagoon be
t w·een t he eastern and westePn parts of Vfin t hrop . Fine
s ediments accumulated in t h is lagoon to f orm the central
lowland area of vlinthrop . The salt marsh in t he no r thl'lest
s ection of the tolvn i-'las created in t he same way.
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Wintl:1l"OP Beach curves between the t'·m headlands,
Grover's Cliff and Great Head. It is protected at most
points by a high concave seawall. At places,the s ea
bottom dips sharply,and the sea is in almost constant
contact wit~ the seawall. Elsewheres,the bottom slope
is not as steep, and the sea seldom touches the seavmll.
The bs ach is s andy at its extremes,but in the middle
t here is a stretch of rock debree that has been piled
u p as hi&h as the top of the seawall by storm waves.
Low tide at the bases of Great Head and the High
lands drumlins reveals a lit t oral z one strewn with boul
ders. These indicate the former extent of t hese drumlins.
The Great Head drumlin appears to have been,at one time,
almost twice its present size.
vlinthrop has a humid continental climate vrhich is
modified by the sur rounding sea. The tovm' s mean yearly
temperature is fifty degrees Fahren,."le i t, vrhile the annual
precipitation is some 40.05 inches. Storms that strike
t he town are often accompanied by heavy seas that inflict
considerable damage to property along the beach. Large
quantitie s of rock debree and s and are hurled over the
seawall,and much of the beach area is inundated.
The tovm is one of the most densely populated com
muni ties in Iv!assachusetts. The population in 1950 was
19,496, and increase of 2,728 9ver 1940. The density of
population is 12,185 people per square mile. Winthrop is
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not,however,as one might ima3ine ,just an agglomeration
of houses. There a re a number of open areas in the tovm,
besides the miles of beaches. A ,golf links occupies much
of the central l owland a rea that divide s the eastern and
1•restern parts of the town. On the north1·res t side of the
tmv-n is an extensive tidal marsh . In the '\vestGrn part of
the to1~ is Inglesi~e Park,formerly a fresh water swa mp .
Also, wi.thin the limits of the t0\vl1. a re t\'iO government
forts.
A considerable por tion of Winthrop 's population,l3.4
per cent,is of fo re i gn birth. Fifty per cent of the for
eign-born have come,in a lmost equal numbers,from t wo
countries,the u. ,s . s . R. ' and Canada. I>~Iost of thos e from the
U.S.S.R. are Jews,and they predominate in the Winthrop
Beach section of Winthrop. Those f r om Canada are more
numerous in t he vlestern part of t he town. England, Italy,
and Eire a re t he other chief countries of origin. The
decade between 1940 and 1950 has seen a substantial re
duct ion of Winthrop 's English foreisn-born coupled with
a great inc rease of vlinthrop ' s Italian forei gn-born. This
is an outcome of the heavy influx into Wi nt hrop from East
Boston of people of Italian birth and decent and is a
trend that should continue in t he future. For t h is r eason,
it is to be expected t hat in t he next few decades the
Catholics will replace the Protestants as t he ma jor ity
group in Vlinthrop . There are 800 Jei'l.t.sh families in the
town.
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\'lithin the confines of the tmm are to be f ound some
4,000 homes,representing 5,800 dvrelling units. Since 1920,
the:c·e has been a general decrease in home construction
due to the limited area available for building sites.
Hm'lever, in recent years there has been a renerral of home
construction. A housing proj ect ove rlooking the salt marsh
at the northrrester-.a part of t he t01·m has been c ompl e ted.
At the othe r end of the town,on Point Sh irley,a new hous
ing project is nearing completion. But in order for the
tm·m to mal{e gains in population equal to those of pre
vious decades, new potentie.l building sites must be
found and developed. Within the present limits of the
town are areas vrh ich c ould fill this requirement. They
are (1) Fort Heath and Fort Banks, tvw very desirable sites;
(2) the Belle Isle V.Larsh, \vhich is be ins sl01-rly filled in;
and (3) t he s olf links,which because it lends much beauty
to the tow.a is,perhaps,best left undeveloped. A fourth
possibility is t he a quis i t ion of Deer Island,at present
not a part of Winthrop.
The development of Wint hrop as it is today--a town of
homes--can be ascribed to t he advent of t he narrow 3uage
loop railr oad in 1888 . This ra ilroad circled the town and
thus made possible t he development of the various sections.
Prior to t~:.e coming of t he narr01v guage , viinth rop had pas
sed thr ou3h the following economic stages: (1) an Indian
economy(before 1637); (2) an agricultural econ omy(l637-1812);
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(3) an industrial-agricultural economy (l812-1870); and(4)
a resort and a e;ricultur.al economy(l870-1890). The period
f r om 1890 to 1953 has be en one of urban economic activi
ties. Iviost of the commercial activity in the town is con
centrated in two ma jor and three lesser or satelitic retail
cente rs that handle the needs of the corr~Q~ity . The residents
of the tm·m make their livelihoods outside of the tovin ,
mainly in Boston; and 1'li thout t h is source of income, the pros
perity of the community vwuld collapse. Hence ,the tovm of
viinth!. ... op is a d ependent residential suburb.
\'Vinth~ ·op 1·ms incorporated as a tm1n in 1852 and has a
re presentative town meeting form of government.